The government claimed that Fluor certified it would not use any taxpayer funds for lobbying purposes, and thus claims for payment pursuant to its contract with the Department of Energy violated the False Claims Act. Companies seeking to secure government contracts must agree to abide by a whole host of conditions and certify compliance with a constellation of federal laws in order to be awarded any contract. Under the False Claims Act, a government contractor may be liable when seeking reimbursement in a number of contexts: defective performance, failure to perform according to specifications set out in the contract or otherwise provided for by law, or non-compliance with other federal statutes and regulations (such as federal ethics laws). In this case, the government alleges that Fluor Hanford expressly certified as a condition of the contract that it would not use appropriated funding to lobby for additional congressional appropriations, and thus claims for payment pursuant to the Department of Energy contract constitute false claims under the False Claims Act.
The False Claims Act imposes liability when a person submits a false claim for payment to the government or when a false claim is submitted to reduce or eliminate a liability owed to the government. Moreover, the knowing retention of overpayments can also trigger False Claims Act liability. When a relator files a complaint, the government may review the allegations and elect to intervene in the litigation; however, the government does not always do so. Even if the government does not intervene, a relator may proceed privately. If successful, relators stand to recover between 15% and 30% of any final judgment or settlement. In the year 2012 alone, the United States saw a record $5 billion in False Claims Act recoveries. The Act allows for civil penalties of as much as $11,000 per violation in addition to trebling of damages.
Loydene Rambo, a former contracting official for HAMMER, alerted the United States government to the potential False Claims Act violations through disclosures filed in a qui tam (i.e., whistleblower) complaint under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act. Many cases pursued by the United States are brought to the government’s attention as a result of these private actions initiated by whistleblowers (known in False Claims Act parlance as “relators”). A qui tam suit permits a relator to sue on behalf of the government for alleged violations of the False Claims Act. In addition to the hiring of the two lobbying firms, Rambo’s complaint further alleged that HAMMER officials whose salaries were paid for through taxpayer money also lobbied Congress for more generous appropriations for the Hanford training facility. Despite bringing up concerns of impermissible lobbying, Rambo claims to have been repeatedly ignored and threatened with retaliation, ultimately leading to her resignation. Rambo will be paid $200,000 for her participation in the litigation and the important contributions that her lawsuit made to the government’s ultimate settlement.